OS43A-2033
Iron-Oxidizing Bacteria Found at Slow-Spreading Ridge: a Case Study of Capelinhos Hydrothermal Vent (Lucky Strike, MAR 37°N)

Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Céline Rommevaux1, Pauline Audrey Henri1, Françoise Lesongeur2, David Emerson3, Thomas Leleu4 and Valérie Chavagnac4, (1)Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, Paris, France, (2)IFREMER, LM2E, Plouzané, France, (3)Bigelow Laboratory, West Boothbay Harbor, ME, United States, (4)GET Géosciences Environnement Toulouse, Toulouse, France
Abstract:
Iron-oxidizing bacteria becomes increasingly described in different geological settings from volcanically active seamounts, coastal waters, to diffuse hydrothermal vents near seafloor spreading centers [Emerson et al., 2010]. They have been mostly identified and described in Pacific Ocean, and have been only recently found in hydrothermal systems associated to slow spreading center of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) [Scott et al., 2015].

During the MoMARSAT’13 cruise at Lucky Strike hydrothermal field (MAR), a new hydrothermal site was discovered at about 1.5 km eastward from the lava lake and from the main hydrothermal vents. This active venting site, named Capelinhos, is therefore the most distant from the volcano, features many chimneys, both focused and diffuses. The hydrothermal end-member fluids from Capelinhos are different from those of the other sites of Lucky Strike, showing the highest content of iron (Fe/Mn≈3.96) and the lowest chlorinity (270 mmol/l) [Leleu et al., 2015]. Most of the chimneys exhibit rust-color surfaces and bacterial mats near diffuse flows. During the MoMARSAT’15 cruise, an active chimney, a small inactive one, and rust-color bacterial mat near diffuse flow were sampled at Capelinhos. Observations by SEM of the hydrothermal samples revealed the presence of iron oxides in an assemblage of tubular “sheaths“, assembled “stalks”, helical “stalks” and amorphous aggregates. These features are similar to those described from the Loihi iron-mats deposits and argue for the occurrence of iron-oxidizing bacteria. Cultures under micro-aerobic and neutral pH conditions allowed us to isolate strains from the small inactive chimney. Pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA gene of the isolates and environmental samples will soon be performed, which should confirm the presence of iron-oxidizing bacteria and reveal the organization of bacterial communities in this original and newly discovered hydrothermal site of the slow spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

Emerson, D., et al. (2010), Annu Rev Microbiol, 64(1), 561–583.

Leleu, T., et al. (2015), Fluid geochemistry of the Capelinhos Vent Site. A key to understand the Lucky Strike hydrothermal vent field (37°N, MAR), AGU fall meeting Abstract, San Francisco, USA.

Scott, J. J.,et al. (2015), PLoS ONE, 10(3), e0119284.